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06 Oct 2025

Bloody Sunday Trust marks Nakba 2025

Layan’s Steps will be launched in the Museum of Free Derry

Bloody Sunday Trust marks Nakba 2025

Bloody Sunday Trust marks Nakba 2025.

Derry's Bloody Sunday Trust has announced its programme of events to mark Nakba Day 2025.

Nakba Day is the day of commemoration for the Nakba, also known as the Palestinian Catastrophe, which comprised the destruction of Palestinian society and homeland in 1948, and the permanent displacement of a majority of the Palestinian people.

A hard-hitting new exhibition, Layan’s Steps, will be launched in the Museum of Free Derry on Wednesday, May 14 at 7.00pm.

Based on the work of award-winning Palestinian photojournalist Eman Mohammed, Layan’s Steps tells the story of Layan Albaz, a 13-year-old Palestinian girl who lost both legs in an Israeli airstrike in October 2023 and had to travel to the USA, alone, for
treatment.

The exhibition focusses on Layan’s time in treatment and with her host family in Chicago, highlighting her resilience as she recovered from her appalling experience. The exhibition will be launched by Eman Mohammed, and will be on display in the
museum until mid-July.

Eman said: “As a Palestinian journalist, I refuse to stay silent. I have made it my mission to document what the world wants to forget. Because when we fail to document, history gets rewritten. And when the cameras go dark, genocide becomes a rumor.

“That is why I sought out stories like Layan’s. She is not just a survivor. She is a living record of what Gaza has endured. Her body carries the wounds of Israeli fire.

“Layan arrived in the United States at 13, alone, heartbroken, and in a wheelchair. No state saved her. No government intervened. It was a grassroots Palestinian-led NGO, Heal Palestine, that stepped up to rebuild what the world kept breaking.

“But let us be clear. Palestinian resilience is not a fairytale. It is not meant to inspire. It is survival under the weight of global indifference. These children are not symbols. They are human beings, blinded by shrapnel, torn apart by sniper bullets, crawling out of hell with whatever is left of their bodies and minds.

“And still, somehow, they rise.

“Layan’s journey is more than recovery. It is resistance. She reminds us that Palestinians are not asking to die nobly. We are demanding to live freely, with justice, dignity, and joy.

“This exhibition is not about art. It is about truth. It bears witness to war crimes the world continues to excuse. It refuses to let anyone say, ‘We did not know.’ ”

A version of Layan’s Steps, first published in The Atavist Magazine, has recently received multiple international awards. The article investigated how Gaza became home to the largest cohort of child amputees in the world and also shed light on the severe bias in Western media, which has continually downplayed violence against the Palestinian people, and the massive impact it is having on Palestinian children.

Trust Chairperson Tony Doherty said: “We are honoured to be working with Eman again, after first meeting her when she took
part in our Derry Peace and conflict international week in September 2024.

“Her telling of the story of Layan Albaz really highlights the strength of the Palestinian people as they continue to face genocidal attack from Israel. Layan is a fine example of why a people that determined will never be beaten.

“Her story gives a very moving example of the appalling impact that Israel’s attack on Gaza has had on Palestinian children and gives us the personal story we need to help us relate again to people behind the statistics, the tens of thousands who have been killed, severely injured or massively affected during this genocide.”

On May 15 – Nakba Day – the Bloody Sunday Trust will donate all proceeds from museum admissions to the Palestinian Medical Relief Society, so people will have an opportunity to visit the museum and make a direct donation to an important cause at the same time.

The range of Palestinian-themed items produced by the Bloody Sunday Trust will also be on sale, with proceeds split equally between the Trust and the Palestinian Medical Relief Society.

On May 16 the Museum of Free Derry will host a musical fundraiser for Palestine, with Paddy Nash, Jonny Nutt, Declan McLaughlin and Jennifer Kelly and Luke McLaughlin.

Tickets for this event are £7 and available from Eventbrite, with all proceeds going to the Palestinian Medical Relief Society.

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